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NewsDay

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Cheap prices, Japan recovery lift world stocks

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LONDON — World stocks climbed further out of their August hole yesterday, lifted by signs of earlier-than-expected recovery in Japan and a growing belief that shares may now be cheap. European shares, however, failed to keep early gains and dropped into negative territory. Gold and the Swiss franc, two of the main beneficiaries of recent […]

LONDON — World stocks climbed further out of their August hole yesterday, lifted by signs of earlier-than-expected recovery in Japan and a growing belief that shares may now be cheap.

European shares, however, failed to keep early gains and dropped into negative territory. Gold and the Swiss franc, two of the main beneficiaries of recent global risk aversion, fell.

Investors were also weighing calls by Italian Economy minister Giulio Tremonti for a more coordinated response to the eurozone debt crisis, including the creation of euro bonds, against an immediate rejection of the idea from Germany. MSCI’s all-country world stock index, a broad measure of global equity health, was up half a percent, ratcheting up roughly a 6% gain since hitting an 11-month low last Thursday.

“The markets have been technically very oversold and on that basis alone, they are due for a period of remission from the selling,” said Mike Lenhoff, chief strategist at wealth manager Brewin Dolphin. Bank of America-Merrill Lynch said a “buy” signal had been triggered last week as outflows out of risky assets hit significant levels.

“We note that since 2004, global equities have rallied an average 6,7% (in the four weeks that followed the trigger),” the bank’s strategists wrote in a note.

Nonetheless, the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 stocks index was slightly lower.

Shares in Asia were boosted by data showing Japan’s economy shrank less than expected in April-June following a devastating earthquake and tsunami in March.

Japan’s Nikkei closed up 1,37%.

— Reuters